Yes, these are both explained earlier in the FAQ.
If you are independently interested then the Psychopath Button is described here (paywall): http://philreview.dukejournals.org/content/116/1/93.citation (ETA: http://fitelson.org/few/few_05/egan.pdf)
And Benchmark Theory is described here: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~ericsw/2fef/gandalf.ltr.pdf (I'm not sure if this is a draft or a pre-print)
It is also discussed here (another paywall, unfortunately): http://philreview.dukejournals.org/content/119/1/1.abstract
ETA: While these may not have received much discussion on LW, they've attracted a fair bit of attention in academia which is why they're being mentioned in an introductory FAQ.
Thanks for this. I am a bit surprised they haven't cropped up more on Less Wrong, if they are indeed standard in the literature. I thought I'd come across pretty much every variant of chewing gum, smoking lesion, and Newcomb by now... but clearly not.
Incidentally, having very quickly glanced at "Psychopath button", I wonder if the decider should first imagine a "safe psychopath button" which would kill every psychopath in the world apart from the presser. Consider whether you would push that button. If you are sure you would push it (an...
With much help from crazy88, I'm still developing my Decision Theory FAQ. Here's the current section on Decision Theory and "Winning". I feel pretty uncertain about it, so I'm posting it here for feedback. (In the FAQ, CDT and EDT and TDT and Newcomblike problems have already been explained.)